Things I liked:The weight of the gun. I also like the break barrel action. Makes for quick reloads when snipping squirrels. For the price, can't argue the quality overall of this gun. It's heavier than most but that's my preference. Things I would have changed:better/deeper, scope rail to mount. I had a different scope (same size) from what was included, got it all sighted to hit a ' bulls eye on command and the kick of the gun eventually made the scope slide off the back end of the mount. After re-tightening it and sighting back in, a couple of days later.. the crosshairs fell out of position and eventually broke. For a $30 scope I'm not fussin' much but it shouldn't slide back like that no matter HOW tight you have it. I think that there should be a groove stop or something like that or have a raised mount instead of it being directly on the barrel. Oh, and a nut placement or other such method possible to mount a bi-pod would be nice. BUT that'd be tricky w/o compromising the gun's other qualities. What others should know:I know it varies per gun but the oddest thing is the type of round this thing is most accurate w/ consistently is your standard run of the mill flat heads. I've used all kinds of pointed tip pellets and they consistently veer off to 2'clock or 10. Now, granted, this could be how I'm holding it sitting in folding chair on the back deck off the railing but I can subsequently load a flat head pellet and hit a NRA rated 75' target maybe 4" diameter dead on at 60-75' way, easily. Also, I noticed while the owner's manual said not to shoot steel bb's in it, the diameter of them vs. the copper ones, well I didn't see a difference, and noticed that both are a real pain to load w/o them falling out when closing the barrel. I'll stick to the pellets.

On a second note: I realized that I had not screwed the bolt into the hole on top of the back of the barrel. I realized it hindsight. Naturally, by that point the scope was lost, but I got it switched w/ one what was price comparable at the retailer I purchased it from. ...but now there's no more squirrels to plink at. oh well. there's always pine cones!

Scott--Spring guns are hold-sensitive! You should read the article about the artillery hold. Cut-and-paste this into your browser: http://www.pyramydair.com/article/The_artillery_hold_June_2009/63. Also, pointed pellets are not usually that accurate. Wadcutters & domes are accurate. The BBs will not treat your barrel nicely! Don't use them. All the BBs are steel. The copper ones have a copper coating on top of steel. Don't use them in this rifle.